Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Amid Missteps On Science Of Virus, Trump Tries To Return To Comfort Zone With Focus On Economy
President Donald Trump is looking to the business executives of America to get him out of the coronavirus penalty box. With the U.S. economy stuck in a deep downturn, Trump is betting on his promotional skills 鈥 of corporate executives, small-business owners and American workers 鈥 to rescue his standing just six months before the general election. (Cook, 4/29)
A week ago, President Trump chastised Georgia for starting to reopen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 too soon,鈥 he said. But on Tuesday, he cheered Texas as it began resuming business. 鈥淕reat job,鈥 he said. And Florida may be next as the president welcomed its governor to the Oval Office. White House guidelines urge states to retain coronavirus restrictions until they meet certain criteria, but Attorney General William P. Barr is now threatening to sue them if he deems those limits too strict. And even as the president talks about opening the country, he has ordered it closed to immigration, even suggesting on Tuesday that flights from Brazil be banned. (Baker, 4/28)
He advised Joe Biden鈥檚 initiative to transform the fight against cancer. He interviewed Bill Clinton at last fall鈥檚 鈥淭ime 100鈥 gala. And he鈥檚 treated patients with names so famous they don鈥檛 need titles: Steve Jobs, Lance Armstrong, Sumner Redstone, and Ted Kennedy. Now, David Agus 鈥 an accomplished Los Angeles cancer doctor, researcher, author, and TV pundit 鈥 has been swept up in the swirl of the Trump White House as it confronts the Covid-19 pandemic. (Robbins and Florko, 4/29)
President Donald Trump鈥檚 recent hostility toward independent federal watchdogs has jolted the very Senate Republicans who are among his most outspoken defenders. Two months after acquitting Trump on charges of obstructing Congress, GOP senators are sounding subtle but unmistakable alarms about Trump鈥檚 efforts to brush back lawmakers鈥 oversight of the government鈥檚 behemoth, $3 trillion response to the coronavirus pandemic. And their warnings have grown more urgent as Trump mounts a concerted campaign against inspectors general, one of the last functional checks on his administration鈥檚 performance. (Desiderio, 4/28)
At a March visit with doctors and researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the public health agency at the heart of the fight against the coronavirus, President Trump spoke words of praise for the scientific acumen in the building 鈥 particularly his own. 鈥淓very one of these doctors said, 鈥楬ow do you know so much about this?鈥 Maybe I have a natural ability,鈥 Mr. Trump said. It was a striking boast, even amid a grave health crisis in which Mr. Trump has repeatedly contradicted medical experts in favor of his own judgment. (Friedman and Plumer, 4/28)
The day before the U.S. Military Academy announced it would proceed with plans for President Trump to deliver the commencement address, cadets joined a video call to learn about their return to the school鈥檚 campus outside New York, the American city hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic. The decision to hold an in-person graduation June 13 meant that nearly 1,000 graduating cadets would travel back to West Point from their homes, where they have been distance-learning since spring break, and undergo up to three weeks of quarantine at campus barracks and a nearby training site. (Ryan, Horton and Costa, 4/28)
The White House has ordered intelligence agencies to comb through communications intercepts, human source reporting, satellite imagery and other data to establish whether China and the World Health Organization initially hid what they knew about the emerging coronavirus pandemic, current and former U.S. officials familiar with the matter told NBC News. A specific "tasking" seeking information about the outbreak's early days was sent last week to the National Security Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency, which includes the National Center for Medical Intelligence, an official directly familiar with the matter said. The CIA has received similar instructions, according to current and former officials familiar with the matter. (Dilanian, Kube and Lee, 4/29)
Americans appear to be losing faith in what President Donald Trump says about the coronavirus pandemic, with almost everyone rejecting Trump鈥檚 remark that COVID-19 may be treated by injecting infected people with bleach or other disinfectants, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday. The April 27-28 public opinion poll found that fewer than half of all adults in the U.S. - 47% - said they were 鈥渧ery鈥 or 鈥渟omewhat鈥 likely to follow recommendations Trump makes about the virus. (Kahn, 4/28)
President Trump鈥檚 approval rating for his handling of the coronavirus dropped 10 points from last month after an initial bump, according to a new Emerson College poll. Thirty-nine percent of those surveyed approved of Trump鈥檚 efforts to tackle the outbreak, a drop聽from 49 percent last month. The poll, released Tuesday, found that 51 percent said they disapproved of聽the president's handling of the virus, a jump from 41 percent in March. (Axelrod, 4/28)